Landlord Starter Framework
The exact 10-step system I used to go from broke renter to multiple cash-flow doors. Skip any step and the market will punish you — hard.
I didn’t inherit properties or get a real estate degree. I bought ugly, boring duplexes in solid areas, screened tenants like they were applying for my life savings (because they basically were), and built systems so I wasn’t on call 24/7. In 2026, insurance is brutal, regs are tighter, and weak players are exiting. If you want real cash flow — not Instagram fantasy — follow this framework religiously.
The 10-Step Landlord Starter Framework
1. Get Your Money Right First
Don’t buy until you have 6–12 months living expenses + 6–12 months per-door reserves (repairs, vacancy, CapEx). Run your numbers: 1% rule is a filter, not gospel. Aim for 8–12% cash-on-cash return after everything. Use hard numbers — no “it feels good” deals.
2. Buy Boring, Not Sexy
Target 3-bed/1–2-bath in working-class neighborhoods with jobs, schools, low crime. Avoid war zones or luxury flips. Ugly houses rent faster and appreciate steadily. Pay cash or low-leverage if possible — debt kills beginners.
3. Master Your Local Landlord-Tenant Laws (2026 Update)
Know eviction timelines (now months in many states), security deposit max/return rules, required disclosures, habitability standards, Renters’ Rights Act changes if applicable. Non-compliance = fines or lost property rights. Read your state statutes + local ordinances. Ignorance isn’t a defense.
4. Bulletproof Tenant Screening
Income 3x rent minimum. Full credit + background + eviction/criminal check. Previous landlord references (call them). No exceptions for “nice people.” Bad tenant = $10k–$50k nightmare. Use services like TransUnion SmartMove or Cozy — worth every penny.
5. Ironclad Lease + Addendums
Use state-specific lease. Add pet policy, late fees (max legal), no smoking, maintenance responsibilities. Include move-in checklist/photos. Require renters insurance. Make it crystal clear — ambiguity breeds disputes.
6. Set Up Systems, Not Hope
Separate business bank account + bookkeeping (QuickBooks or Stessa). Online rent collection (no checks). Calendar for inspections, insurance renewals, tax deadlines. Property manager if scaling — 8–10% fee buys freedom.
7. Prepare for the Inevitable
Budget 1–2% of property value/year for CapEx (roof, HVAC). 5–10% vacancy. Emergency fund per door. Have plumber, electrician, handyman on speed dial. Eviction attorney retainer if in tough state.
8. Insurance & Tax Game
Landlord policy (not homeowner’s) + umbrella. Ask about landlord-specific riders. Track every expense — mileage, repairs, depreciation. Use 1031 if selling up. Talk to CPA early — deductions saved me six figures.
9. Inspect & Document Ruthlessly
Move-in/move-out photos/videos. Quarterly walk-throughs (legal notice). Fix issues fast to avoid habitability claims. Document everything in writing/email.
10. Know When to Exit or Scale
Run annual review: cash flow, appreciation, headache level. Sell losers. 1031 into better. Don’t fall in love — it’s business. Goal: freedom, not more properties forever.
Ready to Execute?
This framework isn’t theory — it’s battle-tested. Print it. Tattoo it. Live it.
No hype. Just tools that print money.

